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Detroit schools to cut 3,200 jobs
By Jerry Isaacs
3 April 2004
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Detroit Public Schools officials announced Thursday the district
would lay off 3,200 school employees, including 900 teachers,
by July 1. The job cuts, which amount to 13 percent of the workforce,
are in response to a budget shortfall of $78 million last year
and a projected deficit of $91 million in 2005, officials say.
The cuts in the $1.5 billion budget follow an announcement
last month that an additional 450 administrators could lose their
jobs. The district, which already faces chronic overcrowding in
the classrooms, also plans to shut at least three schools, in
addition to the 16 closed or consolidated last year. The budget
for supplies and purchased services will be cut by more than one-third
to save $50 million, with funding for playground improvements
slashed from $1 million to $250,000.
The layoffs will wreak havoc, particularly for teachers who
are already short-handed and stretched to the limit. You
could see a gym teacher who is certified in kindergarten through
six grade become a homeroom teacher, or an instrumental teacher
might have to go back to the classroom, district spokesman
Mario Morrow said.
Kenneth Burnley, CEO of the Detroit Public Schools, said he
also plans to renegotiate the districts contract with the
Detroit Federation of Teachers in order reduce or eliminate 3-4
percent annual raises that teachers are due.
The 151,000-student school districtthe largest in the
statehas been hit hard by federal and state budget cuts,
the ongoing loss of manufacturing jobs and tax revenue in Michigan,
rising fuel costs and a decline in enrollment. Over the last eight
years nearly 30,000 students have transferred to charter, private
and suburban schools. Ninety percent of the remaining students
are African-American, with more than 7 out of 10 students coming
from families living below the official poverty level.
Facing a $1 billion state deficit, Michigans Democratic
governor Jennifer Granholm and the state legislature are cutting
per-pupil grants for K-12 education by $55 per student and revising
the formula for counting pupils in schools, in order to slash
another $43 million from state spending for schools. In the proposed
state budget, Detroit could also lose another $15 million it has
been receiving since the state took over the district in 1999.
On Wednesday the state senate also rejected a plan that would
have given extra money to districts with declining enrollments.
Because of stagnating or falling revenue school districts throughout
Michigan are facing budget cuts and layoffs. According to Tom
White, executive director of the Michigan School Business officials,
90 percent of state districts are planning to lay off staff or
not fill open positions. Its like getting squeezed
by a python, he said, the pressure just is increasing
as time goes by. It is going to get ugly and I dont hear
a great deal of concern being raised in [the state capital] Lansing.
Like other districts nationwide, Detroit schools are also threatened
by the provisions of the Bush administrations 2001 federal
education plan, the so-called No Child Left Behind Act, which
removes federal funds if districts fail to achieve specific academic
goals. One quarter of the districts schools have already
been warned they must overhaul their operations because of chronic
failure. The school district received a federal reading
grant of nearly $6.5 million in August but continued funding hinges
on 1st-through-8th and 10th-graders passing tests at the end of
the school year. The budget cutbacks announced Thursday all but
ensure future failures, guaranteeing even more devastating budget
cuts.
We dont need any more cuts, said Mary, a
longtime Detroit school bus driver. What is going to happen
to the kids with special needs, the disabled and impaired students?
We heard they plan to take away the bus attendants that help us
in the busses with handicapped students. This is outrageous.
The conditions are already unbearable in the schools.
Buildings are falling apart, there is no toilet paper or soap
in the bathrooms, the classrooms are overcrowded and the teachers
are spending money out of their own pockets for supplies. These
budget cuts are taking the future away from our kids. With the
casinos downtown making millions and CEOs are raking it in how
can they say there is no money for schools?
You know the economy is way down when you start taking
away from schools that are already hurting. How can you talk about
No Child Left Behind when you are laying off teachers?
See Also:
Detroit school employees
march against layoffs
[22 February 2002]
Detroit school restructuring
plan attacks workers and students
[17 April 2001]
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